What Is Asymptomatic Bacteriuria?
Asymptomatic bacterial urine, also known as occult urinary urine, is an occult urinary tract infection, which means that the patient has true bacterial urine without any clinical symptoms of urinary tract infection. It is often found during physical examinations in healthy people or routine urine bacteriological examinations for other kidney diseases.
Asymptomatic bacterial urine
- Asymptomatic bacterial urine, also known as occult urinary urine, is an occult urinary tract infection, which means that the patient has
- Asymptomatic bacterial urine can evolve from symptomatic urination, that is, the symptomatic urination is naturally relieved or the symptoms disappear after treatment, leaving only bacterial urine, which can last for many years. Some asymptomatic bacterial urine patients may not have a history of acute urination. In addition, urinary sensations that occur after a urinary tract device examination or on the basis of chronic kidney disease are often asymptomatic.
- Whether or not asymptomatic bacterial urine patients need treatment is still controversial, and it is generally believed that the following conditions should be treated: During pregnancy, especially after 5 months of pregnancy, the former can cause brownish yellow pigmentation in the fetus, and the latter can Fatal gray infant syndrome occurs. Compound Xinnuomin is available early in pregnancy, but not for the last 3 months of pregnancy. Generally, medication should be taken for 2 weeks, and urine culture should be followed up after the treatment course. If recurrence is likely to be occult pyelonephritis, at this time, medication should be selected according to drug sensitivity for another 2 weeks, and then long-range low-dose therapy should be performed. These patients should have an intravenous pyelogram at 10 weeks postpartum. Preschool children are generally not treated with antibacterial drugs, because their bacteriuria cannot be eliminated for a long time, and the treatment is not related to mortality. Most patients with complicated urinary tract will have asymptomatic bacteriuria, and generally do not need antibiotic treatment, because it is not easy to cure, but if symptoms occur, they should be treated immediately.
- Child reviews and asymptomatic bacterial urine in pregnant women are perfect if not treated immediately. The prognosis is poor. Infants and young children's kidneys are in the growth and development stage. They are susceptible to infection and cause kidney tissue scarring